Attorney-turned-novelist Brad Meltzer has two audiences: those who've made his legal and political thrillers (among them, The Zero Game and The First Counsel) best-sellers; and those who regard him as the man who more or less remade DC Comics in his own image, with such titles as Identity Crisis and his run on Justice League. But, at last, those audiences have found a common ground in Meltzer's new novel The Book of Lies, in which uses an estranged father and son's story to solve, ahem, the 1932 death of Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel's dad Mitchell. It's not that simple, of course; Meltzer's novels are seldom black-and-white (or blue-and-red-and-yellow) stories with easy answers, and The Book of Lies is decidedly more tangled than most of his tales. It's also his most personal, as he notes during his Unfair Park Interview.